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1 Host-Microbe Relationships and Disease • Classical ecological definitions – Mutualism: organisms live together, both benefit • E. coli in GI tract; we get Vitamin K, protection from pathogens, it gets warm wet place to live, lots to eat. – Commensalism: one organism benefits, the other is not particularly benefited or harmed; to eat at the same table • Most GI tract microbes; we provide a warm wet place to live with food, we don’t get all that much in return. – Parasitism: one organism benefits at the other’s expense • Disease-causing bacteria; to them, we’re dinner. • Classically, a “parasite” lives in or on host. 2 Terms, terms, and more terms • Contamination: presence of microbes (where they don’t belong). • Infection: multiplication of parasitic organisms in/on host. – Infestation: used to describe larger organisms, e.g. lice. • Disease: malfunction in or damage to the host. – Many kinds of “disease”; here we discuss “infectious disease”. – Disease is a condition of the host, not an infectious microbe. • Pathogen: a parasite capable of causing disease – Not all pathogens are equal as we will see.. • Pathogenicity: ability of pathogen to cause disease 3 Terms, terms, and more terms-2 • Virulence: relative ability to cause disease. – Especially variations in pathogenicity w/in specific group – Can be weakened (attenuation) or increased (animal passage); Growing pathogens on agar attenuates them. • Normal microbiota: the microbes normally found on the body. Since people are not “normally” sick, pathogens are not normally consider “normal microbiota”. • “flora” is to be avoided as microbes are NOT plants! – Resident microbiota: always found on human tissues. – Transient microbiota: come and go, can include potential pathogens. 4 Where do they live? • Microbes live where it is “topologically outside” – We are a tube within a tube. We have sacs open to the outside. • Respiratory tract: – nasal passages, sinuses, trachea, lungs. Lungs well protected, other areas more populated. • GI tract: Crowded! – Mouth is full, fewer in esophagus and stomach; toward end of small intestine, numbers increase greatly. – Feces consist largely of bacteria. http://www.radiation-scott.org/deposition/respfig2.gif 5 Where do they live?-2 • Skin: largest organ in the body. – Colonized. Various factors keep the numbers down. • Genito-urinary tract: – Female reproductive tract colonized, especially with Lactobacillus which is helpful and with yeast which is occasionally not helpful. – Lower portion of urethra contains some bacteria, but bladder, ureters, and kidneys normally sterile. • All areas of the body have mechanisms for keeping us from being lunch; to be discussed soon. 6 What determines whether we get sick? • Inf Dis: the likelihood of contracting an infectious disease. • N: the numbers of infecting organisms. •V: the virulence of the organism. •HF: host factors, including overall health, nutritional status, genetic background, age, immune status. 7 How dangerous? • Pathogen: causes disease. • Opportunistic pathogen: can cause disease under the right circumstances – Dose in high numbers – Host is in a weakened state, e.g. HIV infection. – Organism gets where it doesn’t belong • E. coli and urinary tract infections. – Lack of microbial antagonism, e.g. superinfection • competition for space, nutrients; bacteriocins. • Saprotroph: decompose dead stuff. Whether an organism will cause disease is not always a clear cut thing 8 • Not everything in biology can be neatly classified. There is a gradation from pathogen to opportunist to non-infectious, and what happens depends on the balance of these 3 factors. 9 Types of disease • • • • Inherited diseases: caused by a faulty gene Congenital: due to damage during development. Degenerative diseases, due to age or lifestyle Nutritional, endocrine, mental, immunological, neoplastic (cancer), idiopathic; same caveat. • Iatrogenic: caused by doctor. – Nosocomial infections: occur in hospital. • Infectious disease: caused by infectious agents – Bacteria, viruses, fungi, etc. – Infectious agents may affect other types of disease 10 Types of infectious diseases • Communicable: can be spread from one person to another. – Example: tuberculosis, HIV • Contagious: highly communicable, can easily be spread from one person to another. – Genital herpes, measles. • Non-communicable: are not spread from one host to another. – Examples: your infected appendix bursts – You get tetanus from “rusty nail” How bacteria cause disease 11 • Bacteria can be invasive – Bacteria spread through tissues, usually using digestive enzymes which damage tissues, kill cells. • Bacteria can be toxigenic (produce toxins) – Bacteria may not spread, but release soluble toxins which dissolve in body fluids, damaging cells. – Gram negatives contain endotoxin (LPS) • Host processes – Host defenses, like inflammation, may overrespond, cause significant tissue damage. Steps in an infectious disease-Overview 12 • Entry and attachment – Microbe needs to approach tissue, then attach to it. • Deal with host defense – Successful parasite must infect, persist long enough to reproduce, then escape. Host defense seeks to kill it. • Damage: if disease is involved, damage occurs. • Escape: parasite must escape and spread to others. – Discussed in “Portals of exit” Virulence Factors: Things that bacteria have that improve their abilities to cause disease – Fimbriae, capsules, enzymes, toxins, all these things. Typical steps in a bacterial infection 13 • Attachment – Typical first step is attachment to tissues. Often a specific interaction takes place between molecules. – Fimbriae, capsules help in attachment. – Molecules that aid in attachment = adhesins. • Deal with host defenses – A pathogen can defend, attack, or hide. • Interfere with phagocytosis, have a capsule, etc. • Produce leukocidins, etc. • Switch surface antigens, hide inside WBC, etc. Step 3: Damage 14 • Damage occurs from combination of factors – Bacteria increase their growth by • Releasing enzymes that break down host cell molecules, releasing nutrients or allowing spread. –Hemolysins release iron. • Releasing toxins that kill cells or damage organ systems, eliminating host resistance. – Bacteria cause disease by • Stimulating inflammation, leading to damage and discomfort • Over-stimulating host defense, damaging cells and organ systems. Virulence factors: enzymes and toxins • Enzymes – Coagulase, streptokinase. – Allow spread or hiding of pathogen. • Toxins – Exotoxins, produced by G+ and G-, proteins, heat labile, released and affect different targets • Enterotoxins, neurotoxins, general cytotoxins. – Endotoxin: LPS, especially Lipid A part • Present only on Gram – • Released when bacterium dies –Acts as Super antigen 15 Hijacking host defenses 16 • Inflammation – A protective mechanism, but can cause local damage. • Chronic inflammation results in loss of functional tissue, disease. • Super antigens – Endotoxin, Toxic Shock Syndrome toxin, et al. • Cause massive over response of WBCs – Fever, shock, intravascular coagulation, emesis • Over-response followed by under-response Epidemiology and Disease terms • Epidemiology is the study of disease: – the study of the factors involved in the frequency and spread of disease. • Etiology – The study of the causes of disease • Signs and symptoms – Signs are observable/measurable – Symptoms are experienced by patient • Syndrome: collection of signs and symptoms 17 More epidemiology definitions 18 • Incidence: # of new cases during a time period • Prevalence: ongoing cases at any one time – Both often expressed per number of people at risk • Mortality and morbidity rate: – Death and sickness per total population over a given period of time. – Many diseases have unique patterns, such as flu occurring during the winter months. The first epidemiological study John Snow, London, 1854 The cause of cholera wasn’t known, but Snow guessed it was spread by water. By mapping all the known cases and comparing them to the sources of water, he correctly identified the source of the problem. http://www.sfu.ca/gis/bguide/icons/figure1.4_snowmap.gif 19 Terms-1 20 • Acute, subacute, chronic – Refers to how long the disease lasts – Acute is short lived, subacute longer,chronic longest • Local, systemic – A local infection is in one specific place, systemic means throughout the body. • Primary, secondary, superinfection – Primary: the first or main infection – Secondary: a second infection once weakened by a first one. – Second infection usually blamed on antibiotic Rx Terms-2 21 • Bacteremia, viremia vs. septicemia (blood poisoning) – Bacteremia is a clinical finding: bacteria in the blood – Septicemia is a disease condition, microbes actively growing in, infecting blood. – Viremia: viruses in the blood, common in systemic infections • http://www.mansfield.ohiostate.edu/~sabedon/biol2040.htm – Excellent web site with definition of many, many terms related to infection and disease. Susceptibility and transmission 22 • Exogenous vs. endogenous – Exogenous means infection comes from outside the host. Examples: common cold, STD. – Endogenous means host is original source of infection. Examples: boils on skin spread by fingers from Staph sinus infection; E. coli urinary tract infection. • Compromised host – Weakened immune system, poor lung clearance from bed rest, surgical wounds, bedsores, etc. Where germs live: reservoirs 23 • Humans – May be sick, may be carriers • Animals – Many diseases are zoonotic but can also be caught by humans; animal may be healthy or not. • Non-living – Soil, water are typical homes to microbes that can cause disease. The Ins and Outs of infections: Portals of entry and exit 24 • The successful parasite has to get in, multiply, then get out to spread to others. • People have lots of entry points – Glands, follicles that open to outside – Larger openings: respiratory system, digestive system, genito-urinary tract – Cuts, bites, burns, surgical incisions – Crossing the placenta, infecting the fetus • Pathogens have favored portals of entry – Some microbes aren’t harmful if portal is not optimal Exit 25 • The portal of exit is often the same or connected to a portal of entry – Coughing sneezing speaking: from mouth – Excretory systems: GI tract, in feces; in urine – From sex: vaginal fluid, semen – From blood: insect bites, shared needles http://www.humboldtredwoods.org/images/mosquito.jpg Transmission 26 • Microbe needs to get from reservoir to you. • Contact – Direct contact: touching, kissing, sex, endogenous spread (one part of you to another) – “vertical”: mother to offspring, e.g. transovarian – Indirect contact, via fomites (inanimate objects) – Droplet transmission: less than 1 meter thru air WASH YOUR HANDS!!!! http://students.washington.edu/grant/random /sneeze.jpg Transmission-2 • Vehicles – Water: various viruses, bacteria, protozoa, mostly that cause diarrhea and enter water supply. – Food: unpasteurized or contaminated food, either improperly grown, processed, or prepared. – Airborne: microbes attached to dust, skin flakes, dried mucus become aerosols, travel thru air. http://www.kennethkeith.com/milkgreeceb.JPG 27 Transmission-3 28 • Vectors – Typically arthropods (insects, ticks) – Mechanical vectors: simply spread disease, e.g. houseflies walking on feces, spread germs to humans. – Biological: pathogen goes through part of life cycle in vector • Viruses or protozoa that reproduce within mosquito, e.g. Major method for spread of zoonoses. http://www.doktordoom.com/images/Tick.jpg Koch’s Postulates 29 • Historical context: – So many germs, so many diseases – Logical framework for matching them 1. Microbe must be found in every instance of the disease. 2. Obtain microbe in pure culture 3. Produce disease in susceptible host 4. Re-isolate original microbe http://www.nsc.gov.tw/files/popsc/2003_276/9208-13-04.jpg Stages of Disease • Incubation • Prodromal • Illness (acute/invasive) • Decline • Convalescent Stages for acute disease; chronic lasts longer. http://www.goshen.edu/bio/NaSc104/graphics/stages.jpg 30 Distribution of diseases in time and space • Some diseases, such as influenza, are seasonal. http://www.phacaspc.gc.ca/publicat/ccdrrmtc/03vol29/images/2906f g3.gif • Some diseases are found only in some geographic areas http://whyfiles.org/016skeeter/images/malari a_distribution_2000.gif 31 Frequency of disease terms • • • • Endemic: continually present in low numbers Epidemic: higher than normal occurrence Pandemic: epidemic spreads worldwide Sporadic: cases show up only occasionally http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtm l/figures/00000122.gif 32 Herd Immunity Herd immunity: indirect protection from disease due to there being a high number of immune individuals in the population. The more immune individuals, the harder it is for the disease to be spread among many people; the cycle of transmission is broken. 33 http://wwwmicro.msb.le.ac.uk/3035/3035pics/Herd.gif Notifiable diseases 34 • Notifiable disease: potentially harmful diseases which must be reported to the CDC or other Health Unit by physicians – Allows CDC to keep track and intervene. – Some examples listed by Arkansas Dept. of Health: • Anthrax, Botulism, Hepatitis A, • Pertussis, Plague, Q Fever, SARS, Smallpox, • Tularemia, Typhus, • Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers